Russian Federation: Prison Transportation in Russia: Travelling Into the Unknown
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PRISONER TRANSPORTATION IN RUSSIA: TRAVELLING INTO THE UNKNOWN AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL IS A GLOBAL MOVEMENT OF MORE THAN 7 MILLION PEOPLE WHO CAMPAIGN FOR A WORLD WHERE HUMAN RIGHTS ARE ENJOYED BY ALL. Our vision is for every person to enjoy all the rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international human rights standards. We are independent of any government, political ideology, economic interest or religion and are funded mainly by our membership and public donations. © Amnesty International 2017 Except where otherwise noted, content in this document is licensed under a Creative Commons Cover photo: View from a compartment on a prisoner transportation carriage. (attribution, non-commercial, no derivatives, international 4.0) licence. © Photo taken by Ernest Mezak https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode For more information please visit the permissions page on our website: www.amnesty.org Where material is attributed to a copyright owner other than Amnesty International this material is not subject to the Creative Commons licence. First published in 2017 by Amnesty International Ltd Peter Benenson House, 1 Easton Street London WC1X 0DW, UK Index: EUR 46/6878/2017 Original language: English amnesty.org CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 5 MAIN RECOMMENDATIONS 7 DISTANCE FROM HOME AND FAMILY 7 TO COMBAT CRUEL, INHUMAN OR DEGRADING TREATMENT 7 CONTACT WITH THE OUTSIDE WORLD 7 METHODOLOGY 8 1. BACKGROUND: RUSSIAN PENAL SYSTEM 9 2. DISTANCE FROM HOME AND FAMILY 10 2.1 GENDER AND DISTANCE 14 2.2 LEGAL CHALLENGES ON DISTANCE 15 2.3 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS STANDARDS 15 3. CRUEL, INHUMAN OR DEGRADING TREATMENT 17 3.1 TRANSPORTATION BY TRAIN 18 3.2 TRANSPORTATION IN PRISON VANS 19 3.3 LEGAL CHALLENGES ON CONDITIONS 21 3.4 ACCESS TO MEDICAL CARE 22 3.5 ACCESS TO TOILETS 22 3.6 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS STANDARDS 23 4. LACK OF COMMUNICATION WITH THE OUTSIDE WORLD 24 4.1 INFORMING THE RELATIVES 25 4.2 CONTACT WITH THE OUTSIDE WORLD 26 4.3 IMPORTANCE OF PUBLIC SCRUTINY 26 4.4 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS STANDARDS 27 5. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 28 5.1 TO THE RUSSIAN AUTHORITIES 28 PRISONER TRANSPORTATION IN RUSSIA: TRAVELLING INTO THE UNKNOWN Amnesty International 3 GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS 28 DISTANCE FROM HOME AND FAMILY 28 TO COMBAT CRUEL, INHUMAN OR DEGRADING TREATMENT 29 CONTACT WITH THE OUTSIDE WORLD 29 5.2 TO THE COUNCIL OF EUROPE 29 PRISONER TRANSPORTATION IN RUSSIA: TRAVELLING INTO THE UNKNOWN Amnesty International 4 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Detainees are at their most vulnerable during transportation, and in many countries the conditions during transportation fall below Council of Europe human rights standards. For instance, the Council of Europe Committee for the Prevention of Torture has found that conditions during prisoner transport fall below Council of Europe standards in France, Hungary, Ireland, Lithuania, Spain, Ukraine, and the United Kingdom. The problems of prisoner transportation in Russia are therefore not unique, but they are exacerbated by both history and geography. From the Soviet GULAG the Russian Federal Penitentiary Service (FSIN) has inherited a network of penal colonies many of which are located in sparsely populated parts of the country such as the Far North and Far East due to their origins as labour camps for the extraction of raw materials. The practice of sending prisoners into exile in distant parts of the country is a tradition that was established centuries before the Soviet period and has led to a unique penal culture in Russia that combines imprisonment and exile.1 The size of the country combined with the location of the penal colonies means that prisoners must be transported over great distances to reach the colonies where they are to serve their sentences. They will also need to be transported between colonies, to hospitals for treatment and to and from courts for hearings. Prisoners are transported in specially designed train carriages and prison trucks sometimes spending weeks in transit cells at various stages – or etap - on their way to the prison colonies. The prison carriages or “Stolypins” are hitched to passenger trains and will often take circuitous routes. It is common for journeys to last a month or more. FSIN treats all information about prisoner transportation and their whereabouts with the utmost secrecy. Neither the prisoner, nor their families or lawyers are informed about the end destination before the transfer begins. According to Article 17 of the Criminal Executive Code the Federal Penitentiary Service must inform the family within 10 days of a prisoner’s arrival at their place of punishment. Prisoners are effectively deprived of the possibility of contacting the outside world while they are being transported. They may sometimes manage to use informal channels such as asking a fellow prisoner to call their relatives or they may succeed in sending a letter from a transit cell, but no provisions are made for them to communicate. Lack of information about their whereabouts increases their vulnerability because prison monitoring bodies and lawyers will not be able to locate the prisoners in order to visit them while they are travelling. The fact that the authorities do not disclose where prisoners are for such lengthy periods of time can result in situations that effectively amount to enforced disappearances. In the case of Yrusta vs. Argentina the UN Committee on Enforced Disappearance found that the applicant had been subjected to an enforced disappearance during transfer from one prison to another. The Committee found that he had been placed outside the protection of the law and subjected to an enforced disappearance because a) he was not able to receive visits from anyone, and b) neither he nor his family had access to a court where they could challenge the lawfulness of his situation when he was transferred from the prison where he had been held.2 In this case the authorities failed to inform the family of his whereabouts for over seven days. During transportation, prisoners are placed in overcrowded train carriages and trucks in conditions that often amount to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. The national standards for the transportation of prisoners 1 “The Topography of Incarceration: The Spatial Continuity of Penality and the Legacy of the Gulag in Twentieth- and Twenty-First Century Russia”, Judith Pallot, Laboritorium 2015, 7 (1):26-50 2 See Yrusta vs Argentina, UN Committee on Enforced Disappearance, Communication No. 1/2013, para 10.4, available at: http://tbinternet.ohchr.org/_layouts/treatybodyexternal/Download.aspx?symbolno=CED/C/10/D/1/2013&Lang=en PRISONER TRANSPORTATION IN RUSSIA: TRAVELLING INTO THE UNKNOWN Amnesty International 5 are laid out in internal instructions which are confirmed by a Joint Order of the Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of Interior dated 24 May 2006. According to Point 167 of the instructions, there should not be more than twelve people in a large railway compartment or five people in a small compartment. The large compartments mentioned in the order are the size of a normal compartment that carries four people, and are equipped with only six bunks and one half bunk. The standards therefore allow for there to be twice as many prisoners as sleeping spaces in a train compartment. During transportation, prisoners have limited access to toilets, and during lengthy waits on sidings, no access at all. Prisoners are kept in special transit cells for days or weeks in between train trips, and the conditions are reportedly worse than in normal cells in pre-trial detention which are worse than in correctional colonies and below international standards. Despite legislation that broadly states that prisoners should serve their sentences close to home to facilitate rehabilitation, most prisoners, in particular, women serve their sentences very far from their home and family. This contributes to the length of the journeys they must take and increases the difficulties for family members to visit them. In 2013, the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) ruled that there had been a violation of Article 8 of the European Convention (“Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence”), because Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev3 were sent so far away from their families that it was extremely difficult for their families to visit.4 In the case of Polyakova and others v. Russia5 the ECtHR also found a violation of Article 8 because the respondents or their relatives (where the relatives had applied on behalf of the prisoners) had been sent to serve their sentences thousands of kilometres from their homes. This state of affairs comes to the world’s attention periodically when a well-known figure such as imprisoned oligarch, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova of the Pussy Riot group, or imprisoned peaceful protester Ildar Dadin are being transported and effectively “disappear” for weeks at a time. However, such long journeys and the total lack of communication with the outside world is not an exceptional practice meted out as a form of punishment to high profile prisoners, but standard practice within the Russian penal system. There has been investment in the prison system and improvements have been made, but the location of prisons in far flung parts of the country is a structural problem which means that prisoners are subjected to the human rights violations indicated above, the distance impedes visits from their family members and hinders their rehabilitation. It is time for the Russian authorities to remove the last vestiges of the GULAG and bring their prison system in line with international human rights standards. 3 Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the former head of Yukos (at the time one of the largest oil companies in Russia) and his business partner Platon Lebedev were initially convicted on charges of fraud and tax evasion in 2005.